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DOI: 10.4215/RM2015.1404.0001

THE SPATIAL TURN


a virada espacial

Ana Fani Alessandri Carlos *

Resumo
Do ponto de vista da geografia, o artigo desenha uma perspectiva terico-metodolgica de anlise da
realidade urbana, partir da centralidade da categoria produo do espao, como momento constitutivo
do caminho que formula a chamada metageografia. Uma hiptese se desenvolve ao longo deste artigo: o
processo de reproduo da sociedade se realiza, no mundo moderno, atravs da produo do espao urbano.
atravs da produo do espao que o capital se realiza apontando a constituio do urbano como negcio
e inaugurando novas contradies ( sem deixar todavia de aprofundar outras), que esto no fundamento da
luta pelo espao da vida, iluminando um projeto de transformao orientado pela ideia do direito cidade.
Palavras-chave: Espao urbano; Metageografia; Urbano como negcio; Direto cidade.

Abstract
From the point of view of geography, this article outlines a theoretical-methodological perspective foranalyzing urban reality based on the centrality of the category of space production as a constitutive moment of the path that formulates the so-called metageography. One hypothesis is developed over the course
of this paper: there production process of society takes place, in the modern world, through urban space
production. It is through space production that capital is attained, thus pointing out the constitution of what
is urban as a business and introducing new contradictions (without ceasing to intensify other ones), which
are at the basis of the struggle for space in life. This shines light on a transformation project guided by the
idea of the right to the city.
Key words: Urban space; Metageography; Urban as a busness; Rights to the city.

Resumen
Desde una perspectiva de la geografa, el artculo dibuja un punto de vista terico y metodolgico de anlisis de la realidad urbana, desde la centralidad de la categora de produccin del espacio como momento
constitutivo de la manera que hace que la llamada metageografia. Una hiptesis se desarrolla a lo largo de
este artculo: el proceso de reproduccin de la sociedad se lleva a cabo en el mundo moderno a travs de la
produccin del espacio urbano. Es a travs de la produccin del espacio que el capital se realiza apuntando
a la constitucin de la ciudad como un negocio y la apertura de nuevas contradicciones (sin dejar sin embargo profundizar otros), que son el fundamento de la lucha por la vida en el espacio, la iluminacin de un
proyecto de transformacin guiada por la idea el derecho a la ciudad.
Palabras clave: Espacio urbano; metageografia; urbano y de negocios; directo a la ciudad.

(*) Lecturer, Doctor of the State University of So Paulo (Universidade Estadual de So Paulo) - Av. Lineu Prestes , 338, CEP:
05508900, So Paulo (SP), Brasil. Tel: (+55 11) 30913749 - anafanic@usp.br

Mercator, Fortaleza, v. 14, n. 4, Nmero Especial, p.7-16, dec. 2015.


ISSN 1984-2201 2002, Universidade Federal do Cear. Todos os direitos reservados.

CARLOS, A. F. A.

INTRODUCTION

This article begins with some observations. The first one (which may be obvious, though fundamental for establishing the foundations of the debate about the city and the urban in Geography
today) is about the idea of there being various theoretical-methodological possibilities and paths
for considering the world from the perspective of Geography. None of these paths is false, nor true,
which indicates that the knowledge process takes place in the gathering and confrontation between
different (theoretical-methodological) trends and views. We insist on this point because of the trend
of homogenization that is being imposed on the university, proposing a single way of thinking and a
single way of conducting research, with a focus on the empirical and the depreciation of theoretical
thought. With respect to differences, they are presented as a condition for the dialogue between
perspectives that, certainly, will not take place without immense difficulties, since it is difficult to
recognize critique as inherent to the act of knowing. However, under a guise of prejudice, the debate
becomes void, preventing Geography from moving forward. Nevertheless, the dialogue is presented
with a sense of urgency given the need for debate and understanding the current urban crisis.
As a consequence of the observation above, the second regards the need to reflect on the
meaning and role of Geography in the 21st century, in its challenges of understanding the current
reality. A first challenge concerns the disciplinary status of Geography, which, as a product of the
division of labor in knowledge, suffers from exacerbated specialization. We know very well that,
this way, we run the risk of producing (by fragmenting reality, without the whole as a foundation)
ignorance. On the other hand, inundated by neoliberal thinking, the university lost the autonomy to
think about the world, enclosed as it is in the law of efficiency and competitiveness as a final objective. Therefore, the time for reflection has become void, creating a set of quick papers, dissertations
and theses presented in an incomplete way, which weakens our capacity to reflect on the modern
world. This academic scenario recreates the interpretative models that immobilize dynamicity and
make explicit the clarifying processes of the components of urbanization today.
A third observation, with respect to the protests that have been occurring in the global urban
panorama, is that they shed light on a possible frame of reference that enables a reflection on the
urban crisis, placing the dialectic at the heart of the issue. In Brazil, the so-called workshops of
June 2013, whose initial theme was public transportation (price, quality, inefficiency), challenged
public authorities and researchers. They brought up much more complex questions than mobility,
highlighting the dynamic of urban production in its socio-spatial components. It is possible to
understand them as a struggle in the city for the city, which changes the terms of the issue. This is
because, on the one hand, they signal a question about the direction of public policies that promote
the establishment of the urban as a business based on the alliances between the public and private
spheres openly contrary to the interests of society. On the other, they reveal segregation and, with
it, the awareness of depriving some of the city. Therefore, the aforementioned protests evidence an
urban production in which access to the city, as a place to live, is strongly characterized by segregation, which, in turn, is founded on an inequality that emerged historically and which produced the
private appropriation of social wealth. This overview points towards the fundamental contradiction
of the production of space: its social production versus its private appropriation. The contradiction,
assumed in the establishment of capitalist society, develops due to the production of property as an
abstraction, in its private dimension, as well as in its legal form at the foundation of the capitalist
production of space.
As such, we can consider the movements (which characterize urban life, particularly metropolitan life), the protests on the streets question that which is at the basis of our society: the differential
appropriation of wealth, inequality always being reinstated with the development of capitalism, the
commodification of the world, political alliances aimed at capital accumulation, the abuse of power
and, fundamentally, the expulsion of a significant portion of society from the public sphere. From
this perspective, they question the logic of growth and the rationale of the means of production, as
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The Spatial Turn

the reproduction of social relations dominated by the market. They emerge as a struggle for living
space, for a democratic space where they can express themselves and decide on a common destiny.
Therefore, they allow us to bring up to date the debate on alienation, by confronting the city as a
construction site with the subjects that built it.
A POSSIBLE PATH
Metageography is the name of the analysis that we have been building over the past few decades with critical effort in relation to the Geography that we study. It is not about creating another
Geography, but about the need to overcome the fragmentations imposed by the geographical studies that define many geographies, in which researchers can divide the reality studied, as well as
making the levels of analysis (economic, cultural) autonomous.
Therefore, we present the following question: How can Geography produce a way of thinking
that explains reality as a whole (shedding light on the contradictions of the modern world as a
foundation of conflicts experienced in the city, revealing the highly unequal society in which we
live), replacing disciplinary division?
Our path intends to develop an understanding of urban reality through the centrality of the
notion of space production, which results from the assumption that the production of space is
inherent to living life and, therefore, social relations have a demand for space and time. In sum,
this means that the materialization of the spatial process takes place in everyday life by establishing
social relations that produce places. Man appropriates the world, through the appropriation of space,
in all of its senses and its body, giving space a double dimension. On the one hand, it means locating activities and human actions constitutive of life; on the other, it includes in its nature, a social
component given by the social relations that are carried out in a determined space-time, which is
the reproduction of society. This perspective clarifies the role of the city as a human construction,
a materiality produced over the course of history, location and product, throughout its constant
reproduction, which therefore enables us to see space as a product of humanity. Therefore, among
the human activities that produce the world and history, one of them produces space. That is, the
production of life/production of space constitute a historical relation and emerge as a civilizing
moment, hence, the inextricability of the production of man and the production of space.
Here, we propose a shift in the analysis. We move away from the simple understanding of the
distribution of the activities of men/human groups throughout space, towards the social production
of space as a moment of the production of life.
The production of space thus allows us to replace the idea of space as a stage for human action,
enabling an understanding of the social dimension of space produced for a society distinguished
by classes. The active role of a society that builds an objective world in practice, which can be
characterized as socio-spatial, points to the reproduction of social relations as a space-time relation.
Space thought of as a production/product of the action of society is thus entirely immersed in social
reproduction. This change in thought gives us a glimpse of the role of the production of space in the
reproduction of contemporary society. This analytical shift implies rethinking categories of urban
analysis, such as: urban land income, urban environment, segregation, etc.
In the capitalist economic system, the production process makes space itself a commodity,
(with characteristics, different from those of the classic commodity). As such, space is subject to the
law of the value that qualifies it as a use value and exchange value, with its access conditional upon
the existence of property and the dynamics of the market. Within the scope of the exchange value,
the production of space is subject to the logic of ownership, which is established at the moment of
private appropriation of portions of the city (the expression of this production), of which one may be
an exclusive sphere of a private nature, excluding all other possibilities (which, in its various forms,
is the foundation of wealth). This action establishes and makes human existence possible and takes
place as a process of the reproduction of life through the process of appropriating the world. The
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CARLOS, A. F. A.

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urban space reproduced in the modern world, under the guidance of the exchange value, positions
the citizens in the city, limiting and determining their everyday lives. This guidance conflicts with
the use value and use as a dimension of living human life. It is a necessary step to understanding the
social conflicts that manifest as a struggle for housing, public transportation, urban infrastructure,
green areas, etc. In space, however, conflicts are revealed, relations of inequality are maintained
and broadened, as can be seen in the city and in urban life in its broad dimensions and scales.
On this theoretical path, the following are replaced: a) the phenomenon level (though without eliminating it), aiming to understand, in depth, the contradictory dynamic behind the new
appearances that characterize the urban landscape and the world of images and ideologies that
are scattered throughout everyday life; b) the absolute materiality of space imposed by the idea
of organizing activities in the territory shedding light on the objectivity/subjectivity relation; c)
the naturalization of social processes towards the social components of the production of space,
revealing the productive strength of capital in the production/reproduction of space in its practical
dimension; d) the ideologies that sustain the welfare society, reducing subjects to their status as
a consumer in the growing pursuit of new products, in renewed spaces. Therefore, this perspective
presents, as a consequence, questions about the world in which we live and a pursuit of the residual forces present in the urban, that act to change it. The path pointed out here indicates the need
to replace the ontological dimension of space, though it is not about having an epistemological
debate, but about directing knowledge towards the production/reproduction of space as a level of
social reality. One of the hypotheses suggests that in space one can see the concrete possibilities of
accomplishing the transformation of the current society. Metageography, thus associating theory
and practice, deals with the elements that form the basis of praxis. In this sense, urban life sheds
light on the sphere of everyday life, where atomization, while it is the super-organization of life, is
also a field of voluntary and planned self-regulation, imposed, without resistance, through a strongly bureaucratized order, by means of imperceptible repressions and pressures. This situation still
brings with it, dialectically, that which denies this logic.
CONTRADICTIONS OF SPACE
Praxis is revealed to be contradictory, that is, the contradiction between the social production
of space and its private appropriation is at the basis of understanding spatial reproduction, which
determines all moments of life. The production of space is subject to the capitalist logic that turns
it into a commodity, subsuming life. The production of space as a commodity is increasingly linked
to the commodity form, serving the needs of accumulation, through the metamorphoses of uses
and functions of places that are also reproduced under the law of the reproducible, based on the
strategies of reproduction (at each moment in the history of capitalism).
In its development, capitalism has spread throughout the planet, creating a global space, stimulating new sectors of activities as an extension of productive activities. From this situation, we can
observe the two following processes: on the one hand, space produced as a commodity enters the
exchange circuit, to the extent in which all social and economic activities require the use of space as
a condition of appropriation. So, it is fragmented and portions of the city are sold for reproduction.
In this sense, space emerges as a condition of social and economic production. But, on the
other hand, space is the means for its completion and, therefore, its product. From the point of view
of accumulation, urban space becomes a location and support for the social relations of production
(and ownership). However, at its foundation is the condition and means of establishing the capital
turnover cycle, constantly recreating places favorable for moments of production, distribution,
circulation, exchange and consumption of commodities material as well as immaterial as an
ever-increasing possibility of the realization of capital. In this movement, places are designed as
those with the necessary infrastructure for carrying out each specific activity, such that one can see
a favorable equation for the realization of profit. But, each fraction of capital acts according to its
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The Spatial Turn

own logic (either countering or associating it) to quickly fulfill its purpose continued accumulation. Flowing and Fixed, materiality and movement, the process is established by the uninterrupted
passage of one moment to another of the capital turnover cycle (which, by turning over, realizes
capital as a valuation process), at the same time in which it brings together and associates individual
capital cycles. Far from being blind development, the aforementioned process is sustained through
precise strategies.
Today, capital moves at a different pace in space, since investments migrate quickly from one
sector of the economy to another in pursuit of profit, at a time of productive restructuring. At the
same time, a portion becomes merely speculative capital, with autonomy in relation to the productive
sphere. We defend the thesis that the reality of this 21st century points towards the importance of
the reproduction of urban space as a necessary condition for accumulation, in the move from the
hegemony of industrial capital to financial capital. The current moment reveals the move from the
production of space as a condition among conditions of capital accumulation based on the classic
production of commodities to the production of space itself as a condition of the current reproduction in the face of the crisis of accumulation (without, however, eliminating the former moment).
Consequently, the fact that the contradictions of the modern world are clarified as contradictions
of the reproduction of urban space as a product of the reproduction of capital.
This process shows that capitalist accumulation takes place, based on production, for the whole
city, being consolidated as a spatial extension, producing the city as a commodity. This means to
say that, in this century, this production has been acquiring a new meaning, since the crisis of the
productive process requires the development of new productive sectors, enabling the shift of capital to more productive spheres. This has been occurring with the spatial abandonment/redirection
of classical production that of the means of production or consumer goods to the production
of urban space portions of the city or the whole city as a moment of realizing accumulation.
As such, the production of urban space fulfills this process, which means to say that, faced with
the internal contradictions of capitalism in relation to the tendency of the rate of profit to fall, the
pursuit of realizing added value shifts fundamentally to the production of space. Therefore, urbanization emerges as a strategic moment of the reproduction of capital due to the opening up of new
possibilities of capital valuation.
In this new phase, there are new possibilities for occupying space, which explains the emergence of a new logic associated to a new form of dominating space, which is reproduced, ordering
and guiding occupation, fragmenting and making spaces exchangeable based on operations that
are made in the market. Therefore, space is produced and reproduced as a reproducible commodity,
whose production/reproduction takes place under the scope of exchange value (perceivable in the
case of urban operations).
This fact can be observed through the development and expansion of new economic activities
that have gained importance in terms of orientation of investments for leisure and tourism, which
requires the diversification of tertiary activities (new constructions and urban infrastructure) with
the broadening of the role of the real estate sector in the urban economy. We see an expansion, in the
urban fabric as well as in the migration of industrial establishments, substituted (in their location) by
the construction of shopping centers, the creation of gated communities, as well as the reproduction
of entire areas aimed at culture and leisure in major cities. On the level of places, financial capital,
which is appropriated from space for making productive investments supported in the real estate
sector, constantly produces (allied to the construction industry) space as a consumable commodity
no longer only for the realization of the capital cycle of commodities, but as a moment of capital
production. The reproduction of relations in and through space imposes the private interests of
various economic sectors of society, for whom there is the condition of accomplishing economic
production in space.
In this process, the reproduction of urban space signals the move from use and use value to
the imperative of exchange value as a necessary moment of capitalist accumulation, which guides
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the forms of intervention in the city, as well as redefines a way of thinking about it and managing
it, based on new strategies. Therefore, public policies are elaborated as producers/reproducers of
space, aimed at its economic function and indicating, consequently, the devaluation of spaces for
use, of the view of the city as a creative force, of space as a place of culture, etc. There is, then, the
juxtaposition of various levels of reality as distinct moments of the general reproduction of society,
such as that of political domination, the accumulation of capital and carrying on with (the political,
economic, social and cultural) life. So, if space corresponds to a global reality, revealing it on the
level of the abstract (the level of knowledge), its social production refers to a socio-spatial practice,
connecting it to the concrete level and shedding light on an association between scales that intersect,
juxtaposed on the level of places.
This analysis also involves, in conjunction, three scalar levels: the level of global space, shedding light on the virtuality of its continuous reproduction, producing a global space and an urban
society; the level of places, that of living life in the acts of everyday life as a means of appropriation,
which is realized by use, through the body; the level of the metropolis, which acts as a mediation
between the two other levels.
THE ROLE OF SPACE IN UNDERSTANDING THE CONTEMPORARY URBAN REALITY

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The level of the investigation points to the constitution of an urban reality that is generalized
in the modern world, not because the urban population replaced the rural population, but because
the social dynamic is defined as urban in the intensifying globalization process. In its entirety, this
urban clarifies the establishment of a spatial problem, which clarifies urban reality, revealing the
production of space as a moment necessary for the reproduction of the capitalist society, in which
the production of the city itself is established as a commodity sold on the global market. At the
same time, it produces a new way of life based on a new urbanity, by creating new technical objects
that mediate social relations, redefining the forms of appropriating space in the city, imprisoning
the body, creating concrete barriers to socio-spatial mobility. In its objectivity, it points to a reality
subject to the norm that organizes and guides the expanded creation of the production of commodities and life, dominating work process and, based on this, subsuming all social relations (in and
out of production, dominating the class structure of society and defining contracts), given that the
logic that guides the valuation process continually produces everyday life.
In space, the orientation and changes in the forms, structures and functions of places bring
with them transformations in the use of and access to the city by its citizens, beyond the productive sphere. In this sense, the concrete dimension of the production of space (which includes, but
is not restricted to the purely material production of space) demonstrates non-absolute objectivity.
Reality as a reproduction of social relations, under the guidance of the relentless expansion of the
capitalist process, upon incorporating the production of space into everyday life, sheds light on
distinct strategies and projects. In this state, urban space is reproduced as a possibility of realizing
the capital cycle of commodity production as well as the raw material for achieving financial capital, through the productive consumption of space. This production requires the creation of public
policies (as a form of spatial intervention), to direct the budget and construction of urban infrastructure to the locations chosen by the productive sector. In turn, the real estate sector and its focus on
the production of space as a form of accumulation influences public policies through lobbies and
alliances. Characterized by the action of real estate promoters in consonance with the strategies of
the financial system, end up steering the political administration and reorganizing the process of
spatial reproduction. With this, the action of the State through local authorities that intervene in
the production process of the city reinforces the hierarchy of places, creating new centralities.

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The Spatial Turn

URBANIZATION AS A BUSINESS
At this point, a new problem is presented, which guides this research: the reproduction of
commodities and of their world, which feeds off of the production of urban space (the city and its
scope), as well as the social relations defined on the level of everyday life (programmed consumption in a standardized society) as a moment of urban society in which accumulation shifts from the
productive sphere in the heart of the industry to that of the city and its extensions, which means that
its production becomes a moment of the process of capital valuation. At this point, the exchange
value is imposed more clearly over the use value in the production of urban space. This strategy put
into effect by accumulation promotes: a) the sale of natural or historical characteristics of places for
the production of the tourist and leisure market; b) the construction of gated communities on the
outskirts of the city, as a moment of reproduction in the real estate sector; c) the creation of public
policies aimed at the reproduction of space. The real estate market gains centrality, mainly in major
cities, with the verticalization of areas of expansion in the historical center, with the construction
of residential buildings aimed at the middle/high income or corporate market, cultural centers, museums, shopping centers, etc. The policies for revitalizing rundown areas (from the point of view of
the market) aim to reintroduce them to the valuation circuit, as a moment of reproduction of space.
This strategy forces out sections of society that use these places for housing or for socializing in
various and distinct groups.
In contemporary times, society dominated by the economy and by the need for accumulation, is
established in the production of a globalized space as a trend and moment of developing capitalism,
highlighting that the need to overcome moments of crisis occurs by incorporating new productions
into the accumulation process, among them urban space, which is achieved with the hegemony of
financial capital. The production of the city as a business is situated in this context, revealing a
specific characteristic of contemporary urbanization, a moment in which space emerges as a necessary condition for the reproduction of capital, that is, the moment in which capital can only be
realized through the strategy that makes space a moment of the productive process.
At this time, the reproduction of the metropolis is a necessary condition for the reproduction
of capital. Here, it is about capital being established in the specific production of space in the form
of a real estate enterprise, whether for offices, or social housing, cultural centers, shopping centers,
and gated communities. As a social production, its realization is part of the nucleus of the accumulation process, which, in its financial form, is achieved preferably through opening places for new
private businesses in renewed areas. The terms of this reproduction is made clear by establishing a
globalized space with the development of capitalism, overcoming moments of crisis of accumulation
and pointing out the role of space in the production/reproduction of capital.
This process indicates that economic reproduction occurs by means of spatial production at a
time in which money is valued in the financial sphere, being associated to other factions of capital,
and so restoring the unity necessary for carrying out the real process of accumulation, as a moment
of the production of a new space in the metropolis. Therefore, the meaning and role of space is
transformed, translating into a new horizon of valuation. A new fact is revealed: the generalization
of the distribution of added value created in the production of local spaces, achieved on the international level by linking sectors aimed at businesses of urban land. Therefore, capitalism transforms historical conditions, with the purpose of reproducing those whose terms are made clear in
the reproduction of a globalized space as a need for overcoming moments of crisis of accumulation.
The dominated urban space serves the reproduction of social relations of production and is
imposed on everyone, constantly reestablishing the continuity of the valuation cycle and, with it,
the structure of life. The reproduction of space brings with it a new movement of expropriation,
since the action that reproduces these places is achieved by substituting one social class for another
with greater purchasing power. This is a consequence of the actions that promote the valuation of
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urban land, resulting in the lower income classes being moved towards the peripheries, which are
increasingly farther away from their old homes, their jobs and from places of social interaction. As
a result, this promotes unemployment, disrupts family structures, separates activities, breaks up
social relations, and deprives people of their references (which sustain life).
THE LEVEL OF PLACES AND EVERYDAY LIFE

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Encroached upon by determinations that stray from the place, everyday life carries on as a
planned order of space and time, between the irreversible metamorphosis of space and the residues
that persist, between use and exchange, within the scope of the exchange value, to homogenize life.
This logic recreates life and tends to destroy and remove history and identity. An urbanity founded
on the symbols of consumption redefines social relations. It is not only about new technical objects,
but also about a strong media structure. What moves the world, however, is the ever-increasing
possibility of social relations that constitute it are reproduced (under the logic of capital) as a whole, replacing the economic sphere to dominate all levels of reality, encompassing the reproduction
of the entire society as a need to broaden the social base of consumption; a consumption that is
no longer linked to classic commodities. The segmentation of the activities of man, massacred by
the process of homogenization, subject to the logic of accumulation, to the language and symbols
of the commodity, creates the basis for the development of its universal condition as a consumer.
In space, social inequality is expressed as segregation, which is the most complete product of the
existence/concentration of ownership and wealth, pointing to the production of alienated space,
established in everyday practice urbanization is expressed in all of its violence. On the social
level, the reproduction of urban space takes effect as a source of deprivation: that of the subject
deprived of the conditions of life, in its creative possibilities and in its alterity. The situation results
from reproduction guided by the exchange value that goes up against use. As such, the reproduction of urban space, under the logic of capitalist accumulation, replaces the conditions that form
its foundation: the inequality of individuals in society experienced concretely through the different
means of appropriation, founded on private ownership in its various forms.
According to the notion by Sve (2008, p. 560), we are living in a moment in which the self-proclaimed gestational [capital] of the planet gives free rein to the constitutive trend: the unrestrained subordination of human subjects to their majesty, the profit rate. In an aphorism that moves us
as much today, as it did yesterday, Marx wrote, in 1844, that the depreciation of the world of men
increased in direct relation to the world of things.
AMNESIC SPACE

Urban space is today, and has always been, over the course of its history of production, a condition, means and product of reproducing social relations. It is a production that involves and has
as its subject society as a whole. In the modern world, faced with forms that metamorphose increasingly quickly, the references that characterize and sustain life in the city are modified constantly
and the history accumulated there loses its deeper meaning, faced with the need for accumulation
of capital. The constant renewal transformation of urban space through morphological changes
produces constant transformations in the urban times of life, in the ways and times of appropriation/use of public and private spaces. Places transform irreversibly with the simplification of the
history contained in them, making them equal to many others, placing society in direct relation to
a space deprived of memory (as a product of the constitution of an identity revealed by a history
experienced as a socio-spatial practice).
The marks of a life of relations and references of life fade away in the city, in many cases, lost
forever. Changes in the use of space subject to a new organization of time in everyday life place the
individual in unexpected changing situations (at an increasingly fast pace), provoking alienation
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The Spatial Turn

(the way in which we experience modernity). The world of abstraction, which coincides with the
destruction of urban references for supporting life, which constitute the urban identity, have come
to dominate all social relations. In this context, the reproduction of urban space creates a new space-time relation in which amnesic space is directly related to an ephemeral time.
But, dialectically, as use, everyday life is a field of spontaneity, that which escapes and is
opposed to this world of commodities and images. It is the place in which one can overcome the
alienations that envelop it and make explicit the struggles in the city, for the city.
FINAL CONSIDERATIONS
The analyses about our post-modern condition are centered today particularly on the transformations of time and culture, building an a-spatial understanding of reality, which goes against the
fact for example that the occupation of public spaces, around the world, as a place for protesting
and exercising denied citizenship, has insistently pointed towards a struggle for space, in carrying
on with everyday life, as well as that which establishes the public sphere in its possibilities. With
this reasoning, if the places of policy and culture, despite not being insignificant for understanding
the whole, are insufficient, requiring a consideration of the space-time dynamic.
The social movements that have been taking place on the political scene signal an awareness
of the deprivation and, therefore, their understanding cannot be limited to the sphere of the goods
necessary for living life, given that they indicate the scale of the achievement of desires to create
a project capable of opening up to the construction of another society.
Struggles emerge in intervals of everyday life as an awareness of the inequalities experienced
on various levels. Therefore, resistances do not point towards a single meaning, but bring together
various perspectives (flags) in which inequality takes place and the deprivation that constitutes
urban life. By coming together, the movements question that which forms the basis of our society:
the differentiated appropriation of wealth, inequality, the violations of power, the narrowing of the
public sphere. They move in the sense of questioning the logic of growth and the political alliances
that are made against the social. They emerge as a struggle for space, for a democratic space where
they can express themselves and determine their destinies. The struggles introduce and demand
democratic practices, putting on the negotiating table the interests of society as a whole, against
the interests of businessmen, representatives of groups whose goal is profit, whether in the directly
productive sectors or on the level of investments and speculation.
Therefore, the protests in public spaces cited at the beginning of this article break out
in everyday life, pointing out the existence of latent residues in this society. By being defined by
the denial of the urban experience, the struggles place the right to the city at the heart of the
debate. Though poorly defined, the right to the city as a concept requires a profound reflection.
In the terms expressed by Henri Lefebvre (1968, 1970), the achievement of the right to the city
brings with it the demand of questioning the entire society subject to the economy and politics,
manifest as a superior form of rights, on the same level as the right to freedom, to individuality in
socializing; the right to construction (participating activity) and the right to appropriation, fully
revealing use. With this guideline, it is possible to understand the right to the city as a practical
need to overcome the spatial contradiction, use value/exchange value, that reigns in our society
producer of commodities. Therefore, this right will only be resolved in overcoming that which is
at the foundation of capitalism. A utopic project and not a public policy, the right to the city points
to the need for theory and practice.
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Submitted december 2015


Accepted january 2016

Mercator, Fortaleza, v. 14, n. 4, Nmero Especial, p.7-16, dec. 2015.

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